Case Study – Rosa Lee Cunningham Michael J. Rogers Liberty University Case Study – Rosa Lee Cunningham Name: Rosa Lee Cunningham Age: Born October 7, 1936 – age 54 at time of interview Dates of Interviews: Various through 1990 Evaluator: Michael Rogers REASON FOR ASSESSMENT: Rosa Lee is a 54-year old African American female. She is married but has not lived with her husband in over 40 years and has no regular contact with him. She has eight adult children, three of which intermittently
Financial Aspects. Rosa Lee reports that she receives welfare and social security checks monthly (Dash, 2006). Rosa Lee has tried to meet some of her financial needs by engaging in selling drugs and prostitution. Social Functioning. Rosa Lee reports that she has friends whom she meets with at McDonald’s after visiting the methadone clinic. Most of her friends have either passed away and her only form of social interaction is her trips to McDonalds. DIAGNOSTIC IMPRESSION: Rosa Lee has tried very hard
The Case of Rosa Lee Neal DenDulk Liberty University The Case of Rosa Lee Case Study Name: Rosa Lee Cunningham DOB/Age: 52 Dates of Interviews: 10/07/1994 Evaluator: Neal DenDulk REASON FOR ASSESSMENT: Rosa Lee Cunningham is a 52 year old African-American single mother of eight, who is a long time heroin addict, and has an extensive criminal record. Of her eight children six of them have followed her in her life of addiction and crime. These crimes include everything from petty theft, to prostitution
Case Study and Treatment Recommendations Evonne Moore Liberty University NAME: Rosa Lee Cunningham DOB/AGE: October 7th, 1936—52 DATE OF INTERVIEW: 04- 05-2015 EVALUATOR: Evonne Moore REASON FOR ASSESSMENT: Rosa Lee Cunningham is a 52 year old African American women with an addiction of heroin. Rosa Lee grew up in poverty. Her mother and father were sharecroppers who had migrated to the city. Rosa Lee had eight children, six boys and two girls. She was 14 years old when she had her
words are written in the Constitution; words that must be applied to all citizens of the United States with no exception. During the 1930’s, these words were taken with a grain of salt in the Deep South. In the novel To Kill a MockingBird by Harper Lee, the problems of this era concerning racism are represented by a fictional town in Alabama, called Maycomb. By analyzing race relations both in the novel and present day, one can conclude that social justice has improved, which can be discussed through
The article titled ``Death and Justice: How Capital Punishment Affirms Life? `` was written by Edward L. Koch, is the type of reading that is thought provoking as well as a stimulant for further study and discussion. It addresses the death penalty and questions if it is justifiable. Overall, Koch's essay is in favor of the death penalty. However, he uses a counterargument to organize his thought process. It focuses, however, primarily on seven reasons behind it as well as with evidence where he
The struggle to achieve equality was made even more difficult by the legislation of racism in the Plessy v Ferguson case. The Jim Crow laws were made to strike down the Civil Rights Act of 1875.
Atticus Finch who is an attorney who takes on an almost impossible case to defend a colored man who is unjustly accused of rape. “Throughout the novel many of the characters (Jem, Tom Robinson, Dill, Boo Radley) can be described as mockingbirds” (Gradesaver). To become a mockingbird means to be a innocent that have been injured or destroyed by contact with evil. A well known belief is that it is a sin to kill a mockingbird. Harper Lee had a very similar childhood to the main character, Scout, and she
the national news and a total shock to American Citizens. Hearst 's experience with the SLA, particularly the details of her transition from victim to supporter, has sparked interest for the past several years, including countless psychological studies both inspired and
and keep a gluten-free diet while performing satisfactorily in school. (241) Some individuals with CD, however, reported psychological challenges. This is a qualitative observation with at least three limitations effecting an otherwise excellent study. Firstly the groups are small. Secondly the groups are mismatched 25 to 14. this is a dramatic mismanagement. Thirdly self-reports are deficient in reliability in various